Presentation On Medical Insurance Essay

Presentation On Medical Insurance Essay

Presentation On Medical Insurance Essay

Follow the Money! Medical insurance plays an important role in the financial well-being of every healthcare business. The regulatory environment of medical insurance is now evolving faster than ever. Changes due to healthcare reform require medical office professionals to acquire and maintain an in-depth understanding of compliance, electronic health records, medi-

cal coding, and more.

The eighth edition of Medical Insurance: A Revenue Cycle Process Approach emphasizes the revenue cycle—ten steps that clearly iden- tify all the components needed to successfully manage the medical insurance claims process. The cycle shows how administrative medical professionals “follow the money.”

Medical insurance specialists must be familiar with the rules and guidelines of each health plan in order to submit proper docu- mentation. This ensures that offices receive maximum, appropriate reimbursement for services provided. Without an effective administrative staff, a medical office would have no cash flow!

The following are some of the key skills covered for you and your students in Medical Insurance, 8e:

Skills Coverage

Procedural Learning administrative duties important in medical practices as well as how to bill both payers and patients

Communication Working with physicians, patients, payers, and others using both written and oral communication

Health information management

Using practice management programs and electronic health records technology to manage both patient records and the billing/ collections process, to electronically transmit claims, and to con- duct research

Medical coding Understanding the ICD-10, CPT, and HCPCS codes and their importance to correctly report patients’ conditions on health insur- ance claims and encounter forms as well as the role medical cod- ing plays in the claims submission process

HIPAA/HITECH Applying the rules of HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) and HITECH (Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health act) to ensure compliance, maximum reimbursement, and the electronic exchange of health information

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x Preface

Medical Insurance is available with McGraw-Hill Education’s revolutionary adaptive learning technology, McGraw-Hill SmartBook®! You can study smarter, spending your valuable time on topics you don’t know and less time on the topics you have already mastered. Succeed with SmartBook. . . . Join the learning revolution and achieve the success you deserve today!

Organization of Medical Insurance, 8e An overview of the book’s parts, including how they relate to the steps of the revenue cycle, follows:

Part Coverage

1: Working with Medical Insurance and Billing

Covers Steps 1 through 3 of the revenue cycle by introducing the major types of medical insurance, payers, and regulators, as well as the steps of the cycle. Also covers HIPAA/HITECH Privacy, Security, and Electronic Health Care Transactions/Code Sets/Breach Notification rules. Presentation On Medical Insurance Essay

2: Claim Coding Covers Steps 4 through 6 of the revenue cycle while building skills in correct coding procedures, using coding references, and comply- ing with proper linkage guidelines.

3: Claims Covers Step 7 of the revenue cycle by discussing the general procedures for calculating reimbursement, how to bill compliantly, and preparing and transmitting claims.

4: Claim Follow-Up and Payment Processing

Covers Steps 8 through 10 of the revenue cycle by describing the major third-party private and government-sponsored payers’ proce- dures and regulations along with specific filing guidelines. Also explains how to handle payments from payers, follow up and appeal claims, and correctly bill and collect from patients. This part includes two case stud- ies chapters that provide exercises to reinforce knowledge of complet- ing primary/secondary claims, processing payments from payers, and handling patients’ accounts. The case studies in Chapter 15 can be completed using Connect for simulated exercises. The case studies in Chapter 16 can be completed using the CMS-1500 form.

5: Hospital Services Provides necessary background in hospital billing, coding, and payment methods.

New to the Eighth Edition Medical Insurance is designed around the revenue cycle with each part of the book dedicated to a section of the cycle followed by case studies to apply the skills discussed in each section. The revenue cycle now follows the overall medical documentation and revenue cycle used in practice management/electronic health records environments and applications.

Medical Insurance offers several options for completing the case studies at the end of Chapters 8–12 and throughout Chapter 15:

• Paper Claim Form: If you are gaining experience by completing a paper CMS-1500 claim form, use the blank form supplied to you (from the back of Medical Insurance) and follow the instructions in the text chapter that is appropriate for the particular payer to fill in the form by hand.

• Connect Simulations: The ability to understand and to use Electronic Health Records (EHR) systems are critical job skills and competencies required for employment in a Medical Office or Hospital. In the past, teaching students the hows and whys of using an EHR has been challenging. Live software solutions require complex installation and support, and often don’t translate well into the classroom. Simulated educational solutions often fall short in giving students the realistic experience of working in real world scenarios.

McGraw-Hill Education is proud to introduce EHRclinic, the educational EHR solution that provides the best of both worlds, both the experience of working in a

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Preface xi

live, modern EHR application, along with the convenience and reliability of simu- lated educational solutions.

EHRclinic is integrated into Connect, McGraw-Hill’s digital teaching and learning environment that saves students and instructors time while improving performance over a variety of critical outcomes.

For Medical Insurance, Connect provides simulated, auto-graded exercises in mul- tiple modes to allow the student to use EHRclinic to complete the claims. If assigned this option, students should read the User Guide at www.mhhe.com/valerius as the first step, and then follow the instructions with each chapter’s case studies. Note: some data may be prepopulated to allow students to focus on the key tasks of each exercise.

• Connect CMS-1500 Form Exercises: Another way to complete the claims exercises is by using the CMS-1500 form exercises in Connect if directed by your instructor. These exercises allow you to complete the necessary fields of the form in an auto- graded environment.

Please note that starting with this edition, we will no longer be offering live Medisoft® or Medisoft simulations as part of the options.

Key content features include the following.

• Pedagogy •

Learning Outcomes reflect the range of difficulty levels to teach and assess crit- ical thinking about medical insurance and coding concepts and continue to reflect the revised version of Bloom’s Taxonomy.

• Objective end-of-chapter questions cover all Learning Outcomes.

• HIPAA-Related Updates •

2018 ICD-10-CM and CPT/HCPCS codes are included.

• The new Notice of Privacy Practices (NPP) that addresses disclosures in compli- ance with HITECH is illustrated.

• Key Chapter Changes •

Chapter 1: New: Thinking It Through 1.7. Revised: Thinking It Through 1.2. Updated: statistics and data in Figures 1.1 and 1.4; Compliance Guideline on ICD-10-CM implementation.

• Chapter 2: New: two HIPAA/HITECH Tips on Texting and Plans Mandated; PHI on the cloud. Updated: four WWW features on HHS, Medical Notice of Privacy Practices, HHS Breach Notifications, and CMS HIPAA Enforcement. Deleted: old Figures 2.1, 2.2, and 2.6; information on the National Health Information Network.

• Chapter 3: Deleted: old Figure 3.7. • Chapter 4: Updated: all ICD-10-CM codes and conventions for 2018; Figures 4.1

and 4.3; Case 4.1 in Applying Your Knowledge. Deleted: key term ICD-9-CM. • Chapter 5: New: Billing Tips on Category III Code Sunsets and Revised Guide-

lines Coming; symbol for telemedicine. Updated: all CPT codes, conventions, and modifiers for 2018; WWW features on CPT Updates, AMA Vaccine Code Updates, and Category II and III Updates; all cases in Applying Your Knowledge; Tables 5.2, 5.3, and 5.6; structure of E/M section. Deleted: symbol for moderate sedation.

• Chapter 6: New: image for Figure 6.3. Revised: Figures 6.1 and 6.2. Updated: Case 6.1 in Applying Your Knowledge.

• Chapter 7: New: key terms 5010A1 version and Healthcare Provider Taxonomy Code (HPTC); text for 5010A1 Version and the CMS-1500. Revised: Figure 7.1; art in Cases 7.2, 7.3, and 7.4. Updated: all conventions for completing the CMS-1500 and all Item Numbers; WWW features on POS Codes, Current Taxonomy Code Set, and All Administrative Code Sets for HIPAA Transactions. Deleted: old Fig- ures 7.2, 7.3, 7.4, 7.5, 7.6, and 7.8; old Table 7.1; Billing Tip on How Many Pointers?

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https://www.mhhe.com
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Chapter 8: New: item in Thinking It Through 8.9. Revised: Figures 8.5, 8.7, 8.9, and 8.10; Case 8.4 introduction and art. Updated: high-deductible health plan deductibles; out-of-pocket limits for metal plans in section 8.5.

• Chapter 9: New: key terms Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA), Medicare Beneficiary Identifier (MBI), Quality Payment Pro- gram (QPP); Figure 9.1; WWW features on New Medicare Card Information and QPP; Medicare coverage text in section 9.3; Medicare incentives text in section 9.4. Revised: WWW feature on Beneficiary Preventive Services; Figures 9.7 and 9.9; Applying Your Knowledge introduction; Cases 9.1, 9.2, and 9.3. Updated: Billing Tips on Medicare Part A and Part B; WWW features on Medicare FFS Provider Web Pages Bookmark and Medicare Physician Fee Schedule; Thinking It Through 9.8. Deleted: key terms Medicare health insurance claim number (HICN), Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS), Value-Based Payment Modifier (VBPM); WWW feature on MPFS Online.

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Chapter 10: New: Thinking It Through 10.7. Revised: Figure 10.5; Applying Your Knowledge introduction; Cases 10.1 and 10.2. Updated: Medicaid info in intro; Medicaid changes in section 10.1; WWW feature on CHIP; websites in Table 10.1; covered services in section 10.5.

• Chapter 11: New: key terms Prime Service Area, TRICARE For Life, TRICARE Select; section 11.3 on TRICARE Prime; section 11.4 on TRICARE Select; Figure 11.1. Revised: Figure 11.2; Review Questions section; Applying Your Knowl- edge Introduction; Cases 11.1, 11.2, and 11.3. Updated: TRICARE regions in sec- tion 11.6. Deleted: key terms catchment area, nonavailability statement (NAS), TRICARE Extra, TRICARE Prime Remote, TRICARE Reserve Select, TRICARE Standard, TRICARE Young Adult (TYA); old Figures 11.1, 11.2, 11.3; Compliance Guideline on Preauthorization. Presentation On Medical Insurance Essay

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